Colors: Blue Color

To demonstrate what recycled plastics can do, Fortum has developed a chair made from Fortum Circo recycled plastic produced from post-consumer plastic waste.

The self-rising Virén Chair is inspired by Lasse Virén, a Finnish long-distance runner who fell in the middle of the 10,000-metre final in the Munich Olympics. The odds were not in his favour, but he got up, won gold, and set a new world record.

The Government has today (February 21) launched ParentWise, a six-week pilot communications campaign aimed at providing support and advice to parents and carers in the West Midlands. The campaign aims to build parents’ and carers’ awareness of some of the things their children could face growing up, and has been designed to help them spot the signs that something could be wrong and empower and reassure them to act if they are worried.

Rail passengers are being warned of further travel disruption after Storm Eunice hit the country.

The warning came as Network Rail engineers worked to clear trees and debris from railway lines after Storm Dudley brought gusts of 90mph overnight. With just a few hours calm between the storms, specialist teams worked all day to clear up after Dudley after trees were brought down in multiple locations.

Warwickshire County Cricket Club has become one of the first sporting organisations in the country to launch a Multifaith Charter, created in conjunction with representatives from Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Jain, Judaism and Sikhism in the West Midlands.

Unveiled as part of Warwickshire’s Edgbaston for Everyone initiative, the Multifaith Charter is a tangible commitment to making sure that the Club understands the needs of different faiths and creates a safe, welcoming environment for players, staff and visitors, ensuring Edgbaston can be supportive in helping people practice their faith.

Wolverhampton’s Yo! February half-term activities are set to offer a host of fun events for the city’s children, young people and their families next week. The half term offer gets into full swing from Monday (21 February) and continues throughout the week, with a range of activities – many of them free – chosen by young people, for young people.

Birmingham 2022 is marking the end of National Apprenticeship Week by celebrating the achievements of the 25 apprentices that have been helping to organise the Commonwealth Games, the major multi-sport event which will be staged in venues across Birmingham and the West Midlands this summer.

The 25 apprentices, who come from across the region, have been receiving training and support since they joined Birmingham 2022 just over 12 months ago.

An eco expert at the National Homebuilding & Renovating Show, David Hilton, has said: “We are currently seeing energy prices rise exponentially with the expectation that this trend is not going to change.

“This should drive us to all think about how best we can use less energy and also how we can manage the energy and heat we do use. The next step is to work out how that heat is delivered to our homes.

Birmingham 2022 has announced plans to bring seven Festival Sites to local parks and community spaces as part of the celebrations for the Commonwealth Games - the biggest event ever to be held in the region.

Festival Sites are free to enter events planned for Birmingham City Centre and across the city’s neighbourhoods during the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games.

The public are being invited to have their say on a far-reaching strategy laying out how we can decarbonise the region’s transport system and improve services over the next two decades.

The draft West Midlands Local Transport Plan (LTP), called Reimagining Transport in the West Midlands, shows how the region’s transport bosses can meet the challenges of tackling climate change, reducing traffic congestion and improving access to transport while supporting the post-Covid 19 economic recovery.

The Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games has announced that there is just one week left in the search to find 2,022 Batonbearers for the Birmingham 2022 Queen’s Baton Relay in England, with nominations closing on Monday 14 February at 23.59. Nominations opened on 11 January and many inspirational stories from across the country have already been submitted.

Haringey Council’s Corporate Committee have taken the decision to rename Black Boy Lane to La Rose Lane.

The new name commemorates a local celebrated artist – John La Rose - who founded the first Caribbean publishing company in Britain and co-founded the Black Parents Movement from parents involved in the George Padmore Supplementary School to combat the brutalisation and criminalisation of young black people, and to agitate for youth and parent power and decent education.

The City of Wolverhampton Council is calling all local organisations to get involved and to submit details of activities or events which can be included in the Yo! February half-term offer for children and young people. 

The Yo! holiday programme is designed to deliver a range of fun activities for children and young people of all ages and abilities, with thousands of youngsters and their families taking part.  

In September 1821, Marie-Louise Christophe, Haiti’s first and only queen, arrived in Britain with her two daughters.

Only a year after her husband’s death by suicide and the assassination of her only surviving son following a military coup in the northern Kingdom of Hayti, Marie-Louise leaned on the support of abolitionist friends, including Thomas Clarkson (with whom she stayed for several months upon her arrival), to remake her life in exile.

Birmingham 2022 is searching for the sport presenters of the future to be part of the biggest multi-sport event to be staged in the country since the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

The organisers of the Games are looking for around 20 talented local people to be In Venue Hosts and Announcers, roles that will involve them engaging with the thousands of spectators expected to fill each of the official competition venues this summer.